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the augustana college
MIRROR
sioux falls, south dakota
- A
o
< -
'r
'`‘
FAO'
One activity which Bill Dull (right) has promoted is a Christmas
party for retarded children.
Ard
Jamz Dutton and his Rosewood Rebellion
Kingsley Davis to speak
on population control
Vol. 53, No. 7
group also features a unique
10-by-30 foot translucent device
called FASOR, which translates
would like to represent not only
Augustana, but the Midwest. We
have come a long way in
working with exceptional
children and I think it's time we
were represented."
Bill is a junior at Augustana,
majoring in special education,
specifically with the mentally
handicapped. He is the current
president of the Augustana CEC.
Among Bill's achievements in
Sioux Falls is the Sunday School
for the mentally handicapped of
which Bill is the superintendent.
The highlight each year is the
highly successful Christmas
Program.
The CEC, under Bill's
guidance, also sponsored a float
in the 1970 Viking Day Parade.
Bill was instrumental in getting
South Dakota Governor Frank
Farrar to proclaim November
8-14, 1970, as Exceptional Child
Week in South Dakota. He has
also been a delegate to the
annual SCEC conventions in
Denver and Chicago, and a
member of the Board of
Directors of the Sioux Falls
Association for Retarded
Children.
Among his platform
recommendations are the
establishment of National
Exceptional Child Month
Jamz Dutton presents
sound and light show
Bill Dull is candidate
for national S.C.E.C.
A world leader in research
into the global problem of over
population, Dr, Kingsley Davis
of the University of California at
Berkeley, will speak before
public audiences at Augustana
College Mar. 23 and 24. Dr.
Davis is widely traveled and
recognized as an expert in the
problems of underdeveloped
nations particularly in Asia and
Africa.
He is the Director of
International Population and
Urban Research at Berkeley and
for eight years has been the U. S.
representative to the Population
Commission for the United
Nations.
Dr. Davis, whose appearance
here is a part of Augustana's
year long "Environment in
Crisis" series, will speak at 8:15
p.m., Tuesday, Mar. 23 and
again at 1:00 p.m., Wednesday.
Both addresses will be in the
college gym-auditorium.
Titles of the lectures will be
"Population Control: The
World's Basic Issue" and "The
Changing Demography of World
Urbanization."
The speaker is a graduate of
the University of Texas and
holds a Ph.D. from Harvard
University. He has been a
teacher of sociology at Clark
University, Smith, Penn State,
Princeton and Columbia.
He is an active member of a
number of organizations engaged
in population research, including
the Advisory Committee of the
National Committee on Vital
and Health Statistics. He is a
past president of the American
Sociological Association.
Don Ellis
Don Ellis and Friends will
appear at the Sioux Falls
Coliseum Thursday, April 1,
1971. Ellis, one of the most
contemporary big band leaders
of the country, is currently
directing a 23 piece orchestra
and plays both trumpet and
drums.
The band will be playing at
the largest jazz club on the West
Coast two days before their
Sioux Falls appearance and will
be recording their 13th album
two days later at the Guthrie in
Minneapolis.
Ellis and Friends has
appeared with "Iron Butterfly",
John Sebastian, and other
nationally known groups. Ellis'
In 1965 Dr. Davis was named
a Senior Fellow by the National
Science Foundation; was elected
to the National Academy of
Sciences in 1966 and to the
World Academy of Art and
Science in 1968.
Jamz Dutton and his
Rosewood Rebellion, a six-piece
group that utilizes 39
instruments to create sounds
ranging from pop to rock, and
bossa nova to Bach, will take
Augustana students on a trip of
sound and light on Monday,
March 22.
The marimba, providing the
group's basic sound, is
complemented with an unusual
variety of percussion
instruments, including the
African kalimba, go-go bells,
guiro, cabaza, tubo, reco-reco,
chocalo, temple blocks, and
many others.
In addition to unusual and
exuberant sounds, the Dutton
by Mary Carlson
Bill Dull has received official
word that he will be amoung
four candidates running for the
office of National Vice-President
in Charge of Programs for the
Student Council for Exceptional
Children. A screening process
has already eliminated four of
the original eight persons
running for the office.
Elections will be held April
20 at the national convention in
Miami Beach, which will be
attended by 10-12 members of
the Augustana chapter of CEC.
Should Bill become the
national vice-president, his
duties would include planning
the SCEC convention in
Washington, D. C., next year and
planning programs at the
national level.
Bill is optimistic about his
chances f or election. "We
already have 10 or 12 states
behind us," he said. "I am
running for this office because I
album ELECTRIC BATH (CBS
records) was voted album of the
year by Downbeat Magazine in
1969, and was second in the
Playboy poll.
The band has been hailed
throughout the country as one
of the finest concert groups in
the nation and the two hour
show promises to be dynamic,
innovative, and breathtaking,
according to those familiar with
the group.
The price of the tickets are
$2.50 and $3.00 and can be
bought at the Common's Desk
all next week. The concert is
sponsored by the Social
Activities Board of the Union
Board of Governors.
Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57101
the tones and overtones of the
musical vibrations into
variegated hues of color in
constantly changing psychedelic
patterns. The FASOR, designed
by a painter, sculptor, and
electronics engineer, channels
sound from five microphones
into electrical impulses which
accomplished through the
efforts of National SCEC and
other various organizations;
more channels of
communication between
national, state, and local levels,
such as more Regional
Commission
proposes
Bill of Rights
Chicago, Ill., March 14 — The
Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education has proposed the
adoption of "Bills of Rights and
Responsibilities" for members of
American colleges and
universities, and suggested new
guidelines for campus responses
to dissent and disruption.
At a press briefing the
Commission's chairman, said the
Co mmission found that, in
recent years, American campuses
have been in "the greatest
turmoil in all of their history."
Dissatisfaction and disaffection
that reflect concerns for many
current problems in American
society and many problems
faced by the college persist, and
are expected to be present on
campuses for the foreseeable
future. The Commission's new
report is addressed principally to
the students, faculties, trustees,
and administrators of the
nation's campuses, and
March 18, 1971
power the lights.
Dutton, a Sioux City native,
studied for two years with
Leonard Bernstein and toured
the nation with Roger Williams.
His appearance at 8:15. p.m.
Monday in the gym-auditorium
is being sponsored as part of the
current concert-lecture program.
Conferences to promote and
activate more interest in SCEC;
national programs to inform
state and local SCEC
organizations of Congressional
actions; programs which include
the exceptional child in the
National SCEC Convention; and
"Operation Awareness"
instigated on the National level
to promote a better
understanding of the exceptional
child in the college community.
recommends procedures
designed to assure that dissent
and protest on campuses be
expressed in constructive ways
and in accord with the principles
of a free society.
To this end, the Commission
recommends that members of
each campus endeavor to agree
on a bill of rights and
responsibilities applying equally
to faculty, students,
administrators, staff and
trustees. "Too often, in the
past," the Commission says,
"faculty members have set rules
for the students but not for
themselves; or trustees have set
rules for the faculty but not for
themselves. We believe the time
is appropriate for certain rights
and responsbilities to be applied
equally to all members of a
campus."
The Commission's bill - deals
with rights and responsibilities
simultaneously "for one person's
rights are only effective as other
people recognize them and
accept responsibility to
guarantee them."
The report recommends that
in cases of nonviolent
disruption, to the extent
possible, procedures internal to
the campuses be used initially,
and that nonviolent actions be
met by responses which do not
use physical force. But violent
actions involving injury to
persons or more than incidental
damage to property should be
Don Ellis to appear
with 23 piece orchestra

the augustana college
MIRROR
sioux falls, south dakota
- A
o
< -
'r
'`‘
FAO'
One activity which Bill Dull (right) has promoted is a Christmas
party for retarded children.
Ard
Jamz Dutton and his Rosewood Rebellion
Kingsley Davis to speak
on population control
Vol. 53, No. 7
group also features a unique
10-by-30 foot translucent device
called FASOR, which translates
would like to represent not only
Augustana, but the Midwest. We
have come a long way in
working with exceptional
children and I think it's time we
were represented."
Bill is a junior at Augustana,
majoring in special education,
specifically with the mentally
handicapped. He is the current
president of the Augustana CEC.
Among Bill's achievements in
Sioux Falls is the Sunday School
for the mentally handicapped of
which Bill is the superintendent.
The highlight each year is the
highly successful Christmas
Program.
The CEC, under Bill's
guidance, also sponsored a float
in the 1970 Viking Day Parade.
Bill was instrumental in getting
South Dakota Governor Frank
Farrar to proclaim November
8-14, 1970, as Exceptional Child
Week in South Dakota. He has
also been a delegate to the
annual SCEC conventions in
Denver and Chicago, and a
member of the Board of
Directors of the Sioux Falls
Association for Retarded
Children.
Among his platform
recommendations are the
establishment of National
Exceptional Child Month
Jamz Dutton presents
sound and light show
Bill Dull is candidate
for national S.C.E.C.
A world leader in research
into the global problem of over
population, Dr, Kingsley Davis
of the University of California at
Berkeley, will speak before
public audiences at Augustana
College Mar. 23 and 24. Dr.
Davis is widely traveled and
recognized as an expert in the
problems of underdeveloped
nations particularly in Asia and
Africa.
He is the Director of
International Population and
Urban Research at Berkeley and
for eight years has been the U. S.
representative to the Population
Commission for the United
Nations.
Dr. Davis, whose appearance
here is a part of Augustana's
year long "Environment in
Crisis" series, will speak at 8:15
p.m., Tuesday, Mar. 23 and
again at 1:00 p.m., Wednesday.
Both addresses will be in the
college gym-auditorium.
Titles of the lectures will be
"Population Control: The
World's Basic Issue" and "The
Changing Demography of World
Urbanization."
The speaker is a graduate of
the University of Texas and
holds a Ph.D. from Harvard
University. He has been a
teacher of sociology at Clark
University, Smith, Penn State,
Princeton and Columbia.
He is an active member of a
number of organizations engaged
in population research, including
the Advisory Committee of the
National Committee on Vital
and Health Statistics. He is a
past president of the American
Sociological Association.
Don Ellis
Don Ellis and Friends will
appear at the Sioux Falls
Coliseum Thursday, April 1,
1971. Ellis, one of the most
contemporary big band leaders
of the country, is currently
directing a 23 piece orchestra
and plays both trumpet and
drums.
The band will be playing at
the largest jazz club on the West
Coast two days before their
Sioux Falls appearance and will
be recording their 13th album
two days later at the Guthrie in
Minneapolis.
Ellis and Friends has
appeared with "Iron Butterfly",
John Sebastian, and other
nationally known groups. Ellis'
In 1965 Dr. Davis was named
a Senior Fellow by the National
Science Foundation; was elected
to the National Academy of
Sciences in 1966 and to the
World Academy of Art and
Science in 1968.
Jamz Dutton and his
Rosewood Rebellion, a six-piece
group that utilizes 39
instruments to create sounds
ranging from pop to rock, and
bossa nova to Bach, will take
Augustana students on a trip of
sound and light on Monday,
March 22.
The marimba, providing the
group's basic sound, is
complemented with an unusual
variety of percussion
instruments, including the
African kalimba, go-go bells,
guiro, cabaza, tubo, reco-reco,
chocalo, temple blocks, and
many others.
In addition to unusual and
exuberant sounds, the Dutton
by Mary Carlson
Bill Dull has received official
word that he will be amoung
four candidates running for the
office of National Vice-President
in Charge of Programs for the
Student Council for Exceptional
Children. A screening process
has already eliminated four of
the original eight persons
running for the office.
Elections will be held April
20 at the national convention in
Miami Beach, which will be
attended by 10-12 members of
the Augustana chapter of CEC.
Should Bill become the
national vice-president, his
duties would include planning
the SCEC convention in
Washington, D. C., next year and
planning programs at the
national level.
Bill is optimistic about his
chances f or election. "We
already have 10 or 12 states
behind us," he said. "I am
running for this office because I
album ELECTRIC BATH (CBS
records) was voted album of the
year by Downbeat Magazine in
1969, and was second in the
Playboy poll.
The band has been hailed
throughout the country as one
of the finest concert groups in
the nation and the two hour
show promises to be dynamic,
innovative, and breathtaking,
according to those familiar with
the group.
The price of the tickets are
$2.50 and $3.00 and can be
bought at the Common's Desk
all next week. The concert is
sponsored by the Social
Activities Board of the Union
Board of Governors.
Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57101
the tones and overtones of the
musical vibrations into
variegated hues of color in
constantly changing psychedelic
patterns. The FASOR, designed
by a painter, sculptor, and
electronics engineer, channels
sound from five microphones
into electrical impulses which
accomplished through the
efforts of National SCEC and
other various organizations;
more channels of
communication between
national, state, and local levels,
such as more Regional
Commission
proposes
Bill of Rights
Chicago, Ill., March 14 — The
Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education has proposed the
adoption of "Bills of Rights and
Responsibilities" for members of
American colleges and
universities, and suggested new
guidelines for campus responses
to dissent and disruption.
At a press briefing the
Commission's chairman, said the
Co mmission found that, in
recent years, American campuses
have been in "the greatest
turmoil in all of their history."
Dissatisfaction and disaffection
that reflect concerns for many
current problems in American
society and many problems
faced by the college persist, and
are expected to be present on
campuses for the foreseeable
future. The Commission's new
report is addressed principally to
the students, faculties, trustees,
and administrators of the
nation's campuses, and
March 18, 1971
power the lights.
Dutton, a Sioux City native,
studied for two years with
Leonard Bernstein and toured
the nation with Roger Williams.
His appearance at 8:15. p.m.
Monday in the gym-auditorium
is being sponsored as part of the
current concert-lecture program.
Conferences to promote and
activate more interest in SCEC;
national programs to inform
state and local SCEC
organizations of Congressional
actions; programs which include
the exceptional child in the
National SCEC Convention; and
"Operation Awareness"
instigated on the National level
to promote a better
understanding of the exceptional
child in the college community.
recommends procedures
designed to assure that dissent
and protest on campuses be
expressed in constructive ways
and in accord with the principles
of a free society.
To this end, the Commission
recommends that members of
each campus endeavor to agree
on a bill of rights and
responsibilities applying equally
to faculty, students,
administrators, staff and
trustees. "Too often, in the
past," the Commission says,
"faculty members have set rules
for the students but not for
themselves; or trustees have set
rules for the faculty but not for
themselves. We believe the time
is appropriate for certain rights
and responsbilities to be applied
equally to all members of a
campus."
The Commission's bill - deals
with rights and responsibilities
simultaneously "for one person's
rights are only effective as other
people recognize them and
accept responsibility to
guarantee them."
The report recommends that
in cases of nonviolent
disruption, to the extent
possible, procedures internal to
the campuses be used initially,
and that nonviolent actions be
met by responses which do not
use physical force. But violent
actions involving injury to
persons or more than incidental
damage to property should be
Don Ellis to appear
with 23 piece orchestra